A Brief Introduction to the Author of Northwest Customs

Zhang Hu (194 1-), male, Han nationality, from Dingxing, Hebei. ** * party member. He is currently a member of the All-China Federation of Literary and Art Circles, deputy secretary-general of China Calligraphers Association, president and editor-in-chief of China Art Newspaper. Professor of Calligraphy Training Center of China Calligraphy Association. Dean of China Ecological Painting and Calligraphy Institute. He has been to Japan, Korea, Singapore, Malaysia and other countries for calligraphy exchange and lectures. Calligraphy works have participated in many exhibitions at home and abroad and have been selected as works.

Published works 65438 to 0959. In May, 20001,he won the Special Contribution Award of China Calligraphy Art. Since 1980s, Zhang Hu's calligraphy works have participated in many national and international calligraphy exhibitions. 1985 held "Calligraphy Exhibition of Northwest Zhang Hu Tourism Photography" in Beijing, 1997 held "Calligraphy Exhibition of Shen Peng and Zhang Hu" in Taiwan. His calligraphy works have been collected by many museums and selected into many newspapers and calligraphy collections. Editor-in-chief: Dragon and Tiger Calligraphy, Collection of Painters' Mottoes, Beijing Today, etc. His published works include Northwest Customs, Selected Essays of Zhang Hu's Novels, Essays, Poems of Zhang Hushu's Crescent Bay, She Yange, Introduction to Calligraphy for Primary and Secondary School Students, and Zhang Hu's Calligraphy Collection. catalogue

Northwest China is my hometown. Preface to the second edition of Praise for the Northwest. What do I know about Ningxia? Camel grass and Elaeagnus angustifolia, the symbol of Muslim Xi Yinchuan on the train, look for the lost Xixia, Lycium barbarum tree, the red one who ever knew that the sea was deep, the bright moon in Beijing fell in Yinchuan, and the "girl" who just got up in Tengger felt the poem "Flower" in Tianshui Gangu, the Dunhuang dance in Hexi Corridor and the color of the Yellow River. Tibetan doctor, I wish you to fly to Sun Moon Mountain in the second half of next year, to your hometown, Bazaar Street in Xinjiang, the underground Grand Canal and Qinghai. The memory of night barbecue in Turpan, the legacy of Kashgar, the nostalgia of Khalidan in the past, a glimpse of Xinjiang in Muqam, and three chapters of the trip to Chang 'an. I read the postscript of the illustrated "Northwest Customs" in the appendix of Yan 'an to catch up with the return of flowers in spring.